
Scheffler ticks off British Open in pursuit of perfection
Scheffler's four-stroke victory at Royal Portrush was already his fourth this year, despite a slow start after a freak hand injury caused by broken glass when he was making pasta.
Since the Houston Open in March, the 29-year-old has not finished outside the top 10 in 11 tournaments -- rubber-stamping his status as the world's best.
That run has included major wins at both the PGA Championship and British Open to take him within a US Open victory of joining the six men to have won the career Grand Slam.
Rory McIlroy was the latest to join that select club when he won the Masters in April.
But even the world number two is blown away by Scheffler's consistent excellence as McIlroy was unable to chase down the only man on the planet currently better with a club in his hand on home soil.
"Scottie Scheffler is inevitable," said McIlroy. "He's just so solid. He doesn't make mistakes."
Scheffler's supremacy over the rest of the field has drawn comparisons to 15-time major champion Woods.
Matt Fitzpatrick labelled his playing partner on Saturday "Tiger-like" and there are a raft of stats to back up that claim.
He is the first player since Woods to surpass 100 consecutive weeks as world number one.
Scheffler's seven PGA Tour wins last year was the most since Woods in 2007 and he has also now become just the second player to win the British Open while ranked number one.
Behind that success is a relentless work ethic, even if it sometimes drives even Scheffler to wonder why he pushes himself to the max.
"We work so hard for such little moments," he said on the eve of the British Open. "I'm kind of a sicko; I love putting in the work. I love getting to practice. I love getting to live out my dreams. But at the end of the day, sometimes I just don't understand the point."
Arrest shock
For those trying to catch him, the hard work appears well worth it.
"At the start of this year, when we checked the stats, Scheffler was further ahead of number two in the world than I was at 15th or 16th to the number two," said world number 14 Robert McIntyre. "He's an exceptional player and a great guy, and works so hard."
Scheffler's dominance on the PGA Tour is beginning to show in his major record.
His four majors have come in the last 16 events, a record which could have been even better but for a remarkable incident as last year's PGA Championship, which checked his progress.
The mild-mannered Scheffler was arrested on the morning of his second round for trying to work his way around a traffic jam outside the course.
Despite being bundled into a police station and having his mugshot taken in an orange jumpsuit, he was released in time to make the tee and went on to shoot a five-under par 66.
The toll came the following day when his streak of 42 consecutive rounds of par or better came to an end and he finished in a tie for eighth.
All charges were subsequently dropped and business was soon back to normal on the course too.
He produced a blistering course-record 62 on the final day at Le Golf National to add Olympic gold to his list of honours in August and took home a record $62 million in prize money last year from his haul of victories on the PGA Tour.
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
Djokovic withdraws from ATP Cincinnati Masters
Tournament officials confirmed the news to The Athletic, meaning the 38-year-old Serb will have played no matches between his Wimbledon semi-final loss to Jannik Sinner and the US Open start in three weeks. World number one Sinner, who like Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz skipped the current ATP Toronto Masters in order to rest and recover from Wimbledon, has been in Cincinnati since the weekend. Sinner and his team posted a golf course selfie to social media on Monday, one day after an opening practice session at the pre-US Open event. Djokovic, winner of 24 Grand Slam singles titles, first played Cincinnati in 2005 and won the last of his three titles there in 2023 after losing five previous finals. © 2025 AFP


France 24
19 hours ago
- France 24
Messi out indefinitely with 'minor muscle injury': club
The 38-year-old Argentine legend suffered an upper right leg injury early in Miami's penalty-kicks home win over Mexico's Necaxa on Saturday in a Leagues Cup match. Messi went out in the 11th minute but walked off the field and into the locker room. Messi "underwent medical tests to evaluate the extent of the muscle discomfort he experienced" that forced him out of the match, Inter Miami said in its statement. "The results confirmed a minor muscle injury in his right leg. His medical clearance will depend on his clinical progress and response to treatment." That means there is no timetable for a return by the Miami talisman, who shares the MLS season lead with 18 goals and also has nine assists in 18 matches. Jordi Alba, who netted an equalizer for Miami in second half stoppage time to set up the penalty shootout the hosts won 5-4, said Messi's early exit was "a huge sadness for the whole team." Inter Miami is 12-4 with six drawn for 42 points, fifth in the Eastern Conference and eight points adrift of league pace-setter Philadelphia but with three matches in hand. Any extended absence also would be a major blow for Miami in the Leagues Cup, which Inter won in 2023 just after Messi arrived in South Florida. Miami, which will host UNAM Pumas on Wednesday, ranks second on the MLS table to qualify for the Leagues Cup knockout stage with five points and would clinch a quarter-final berth with a victory.


France 24
a day ago
- France 24
Coleman defends 'great person' Richardson after assault controversy
Speaking after a sixth-place finish in the 200m at the US track championships at Eugene, Oregon, Coleman said he believed Richardson should not have been detained following the incident at Seattle-Tacoma Airport last Sunday. Richardson spent a night in jail after being detained, with a police report later stating she was caught on video repeatedly shoving Coleman forcefully. "For me personally, I feel like it was a sucky situation all round," Coleman said when asked about the incident by AFP. "I don't feel like she should have been arrested. "I mean people have discussions and emotions and stuff like that. She has things that she needs to work on for herself of course. So do I, so do you, so does everybody. "But I'm the type of guy who's in the business of extending grace, and mercy and love." Coleman, the 2019 world 100m champion, said the controversy had not affected his championships, where he failed to secure a top three finish in both the 100m and 200m. He will still head to Tokyo as part of the US relay pool. Richardson meanwhile failed to qualify for the 200m earlier Sunday. She declined to speak to reporters afterwards, other than to wish media a "blessed day." But Coleman is backing the 25-year-old Texan to bounce back for the rest of the season. "It didn't affect me," Coleman said of last Sunday's incident. "She's a human being and a great person, and I feel like you know, we've been able to be really good team-mates all year. We're just two dominant personalities. To me, she's the best female athlete in the world. "She's just had a lot of things going on, lot of emotions and forces going on inside of her that not only I can't understand, but nobody can. "Because she's one-of-one. I know it's been a tough journey for her this year. "But she's gonna bounce back because she's the best female athlete in the world. I see it every day. She's gonna be just fine. She gonna be good, and I'm gonna be good too." © 2025 AFP